Rabbi Leibel Groner, Member of Secretariat to the Lubavitcher Rebbe

Rabbi Leibel Groner, long-time aide to the Lubavitcher Rebbe and member of his secretariat, passed away Tuesday evening from the covid-19 virus. He was 88.

Over a period of nearly 40 years, Rabbi Groner was usually seen standing at the Rebbe’s side--during prayers, managing the Rebbe’s private audiences, and later during the Rebbe’s practice of distributing dollars to charity on Sundays.

A direct descendant of Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Liadi, the founder of Chabad-Lubavitch, Rabbi Groner was born in Brooklyn, in 1931, to Rabbi Mordechai Avrohom Yeshaya and Menucha Rochel Groner. The elder Rabbi Groner was a fundraiser for Colel Chabad, the oldest social organization in the Holy Land, which opened a New York City office and became a staple of the small Chabad community in Brooklyn.

Leibel joined the Lubavitch Yeshivah, which was established in 1941 in Crown Heights, where the new Chabad headquarters had relocated from Otwock, Poland.

In 1949, he was recruited by Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, who, at the time, was the director of the Kehot Publication Society, to assist him in his work at the Chabad publishing house. Then a young scholar, Rabbi Groner would footnote, index and compile many of the published works. He served in that role for many years.

When the Rebbe officially assumed leadership of Chabad-Lubavitch in 1951, Rabbi Groner began a life in the service of the Rebbe. After Rabbi Groner’s marriage in 1954, to Yehudis Gurevitz, he was formally asked to join, as a member of the Rebbe's secretariat.

In that role, Rabbi Groner was one of the aides who conveyed the Rebbe’s responses to countless people who had written to the Rebbe seeking his advice. He also acted as a gatekeeper to the Rebbe, managing his numerous appointments which often ran well past midnight. Rabbi Groner thus saw tens of thousands of individuals come for private meetings with the Rebbe. He often asked visitors to share with him some of the impressions they formed during their meetings with the Rebbe. Taken together, he once said, what he learned from those impressions was that the Rebbe was a leader not only of the Jewish people, but also of countless non-Jews who sought his counsel. He later recorded many of the anecdotes visitors shared with him in a private diary, parts of which were published in recent decades.

Since the Rebbe’s passing in 1994, Rabbi Groner traveled widely visiting Chabad communities where he spoke about his experiences with the Rebbe, and shared insights from the Rebbe’s teachings.

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